Corrections: February 1, 2015

Feb. 1, 2015

INTERNATIONAL

An article last Sunday about optimism among American policy makers about the Houthis, former rebels who are now the dominant force in Yemen, described incorrectly Charlie Hebdo, which was attacked this month in Paris by two men claiming to be working on behalf of Al Qaeda in Yemen, the focus of counterterrorism operations there that the United States insists will continue. Charlie Hebdo is a satirical newspaper, not a magazine.

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An article last Sunday about the release of a video appearing to show the decapitated body of a Japanese man held hostage by the Islamic State terrorist group referred incorrectly in some editions to Al Furqan, which has posted videos of the group’s beheadings in the past but did not confirm the latest apparent killing. It is a media arm of ISIS, not a website. The article also misstated, in some editions, the number of Americans whom ISIS has beheaded in recent months. It has killed three, not two.

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A picture caption last Sunday with an article about the well-developed underground jihadist pipeline in Belgium, which was highlighted by the recent thwarting of a terrorist operation, misidentified the area of Brussels where two men were standing. It is central Brussels — not the adjacent Molenbeek district, where nine homes were raided by the authorities.

NEW YORK

An article last Sunday about an apartment building in Brooklyn that still lacked regular heat a year after residents sued the landlord misstated, in some editions, the surname of a lawyer with Make the Road New York, an advocacy group whose causes include housing. He is Luis Henriquez, not Hernandez.

METROPOLITAN

A theater review in some editions last Sunday about “Private Lives,” at Hartford Stage in Hartford, misstated the given name of the play’s set designer. He is Alexander Dodge, not Christopher. The review also described incorrectly the location of Deauville, France, where part of the play is set. It is northwest of Paris, not north.

SPORTS

The On College Basketball column last Sunday, about coaches who have won 1,000 games, misstated the given name of the coach at Philadelphia University who is nearing his 1,000th victory. He is Herb Magee, not Dave.

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An article last Sunday about the places where European soccer teams train during their winter break misspelled the given name of a German author who has written extensively on soccer. He is Uli Hesse, not Ulli. And because of an editing error, the article misidentified the winner of an exhibition match between A.C. Milan and Real Madrid in December in Dubai. A.C. Milan won.

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An article last Sunday about the first Super Bowl, in 1967, misidentified, in some editions, the broadcast network that featured the Harlem Globetrotters as part of its pregame programming. It was CBS, not NBC.

ARTS AND LEISURE

An article last Sunday about the FX crime drama “Justified,” which just started its sixth season, misstated part of the title of a series in which Jere Burns appeared. Mr. Burns, who plays the villain Wynn Duffy on “Justified,” was in “Burn Notice,” not “Burn Unit.”

REAL ESTATE

A cover article last Sunday about the rental market in New York City misstated the floor on which a quarter-acre terrace is being built in the City Tower building in Downtown Brooklyn. It will be on the 19th floor, not on the 30th.

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An article last Sunday about Dr. Patricia Wexler and the Upper East Side condominium that she shares with her husband, Eugene, misstated the age of their daughter, Perri. She is 32, not 34.

TRAVEL

An article on Dec. 28 about two villages in Hampshire, England, where Jane Austen spent most of her life misstated the side of Winchester Cathedral where her gravestone is located. It is in the north nave aisle, not the south nave.

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The Check In column last Sunday, about the Thompson Chicago, referred to the hotel’s restaurant, Nico Osteria, incorrectly. It has no Michelin stars — not two.

STYLE

An article last Sunday about the Academy Award nominees Eddie Redmayne and Emma Stone misstated the actress’s age. She is 26, not 27.

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An article last Sunday about a dating app called the League referred incorrectly to the use of the dating app Tinder. Users swipe the app 1.2 billion times a day, according to the company; that many users do not swipe the app each day.

BUSINESS

An article last Sunday about the drawbacks of a strong dollar misstated the size of the European Central Bank’s quantitative easing campaign in United States dollars. It is $1.16 trillion, not billion.

MAGAZINE

An article on Jan. 18 about children adopted from South Korea misspelled the name for Korean karaoke. It is noraebang, not nori bong. The article also described incorrectly an art piece created in conjunction with a lobbying ef ort to change Korean government regulations on adoption. The installation featured paper tags stamped with a number representing each adoptee, not with their names. And the article referred incorrectly to one adoptee’s upbringing in the United States. Kim Stoker was raised in Colorado and Virginia, not in Utah.

SUNDAY REVIEW

The photo caption with an essay last Sunday about the significance of Auschwitz contained an incomplete description of the room shown. The room was part of a barracks, as the caption noted, but it was also used as a gas chamber for disinfestation of prisoners’ clothing.

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